Patent · US Expired

Use of human prostrate cell lines in prostate cancer treatment

US6972128B1 · kind B1 · utility

6Cited by
0References
4Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateDec 9, 1999
Grant dateDec 6, 2005
Priority date
Expiry dateDec 9, 2019

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC A)Human Necessities
  • CPC primaryA61K2039/884
  • WIPO fieldPharmaceuticals
  • WIPO sectorChemistry

Abstract

The invention here relates to a product comprised of a cell line or lines intended for use as an allogeneic immunotherapy agent for the treatment of cancer in mammals and humans. All of the studies of cell-based cancer vaccines to date have one feature in common, namely the intention to use cells that contain at least some TSAs and/or TAAs that are shared with the antigens present in patients' tumour. In each case, tumour cells are utilised as the starting point on the premise that only tumour cells will contain TSAs or TAAs of relevance, and the tissue origins of the cells are matched to the tumour site in patients. A primary aspect of the invention is the use of immortalised normal, non-malignant cells as the basis of an allogeneic cell cancer vaccine. Normal cells do not possess TSAs or relevant concentrations of TAAs and hence it is surprising that normal cells are effective as anti-cancer vaccines. For prostate cancer, for example, a vaccine may be based on one or a combination of different immortalised normal cell lines derived from the prostate. The cell lines are lethally irradiated utilising gamma irradiation at 50–300 Gy to ensure that they are replication incompetent pri…

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.